PART III.

FROM THE CALLING OF ABRAHAM TO MOSES.

I proceed now to show how the work of redemption was carried on from the calling of Abraham to Moses. And,

I. It pleased God now to separate that person of whom Christ was to come, from the rest of the world, that his church might
be upheld in his family and posterity till that time. He called Abraham out of his own country, and from his kindred, to go
into a distant country, that God should show him; and brought him first out of Ur of the Chaldees to Charran, and then to
the land of Canaan.

It was before observed, that the idolatrous corruption of the world was now become general; mankind were almost wholly overrun
with idolatry. God therefore saw it necessary, in order to uphold true religion in the world, that there should be a family
separated from all others. It proved to be high time to take this course, lest the church of Christ should wholly be carried
away with the apostacy. For Abraham’s own country and kindred had most of them fallen off; and
without some extraordinary interposition of Providence, in all likelihood, in a generation or two more, the true religion
in this line would have been extinct. And therefore God called Abraham, the person in whose family he intended to uphold the
true religion, out of his own country, and from his kindred, to a far distant country, that his posterity might there remain
a people separate from all the rest of the world; that so the true religion might be upheld there, while all mankind besides
were swallowed up in heathenism.

The land of the Chaldees, whence Abraham was called, was the country about Babel. Babel, or Babylon, was the chief city of
Chaldea. Learned men suppose by what they gather from the most ancient accounts of things, that it was in this land idolatry
first began; that Babel and Chaldea were the original and chief seats of the worship of idols, whence it spread into other
nations. And therefore the land of the Chaldeans, the country of Babylon, is in Scripture called
the land of graven images; Jer. l. 35, 38. “A sword is upon the Chaldeans, saith the Lord, and upon the inhabitants of Babylon, and upon her princes, and upon her wise
men.—A drought is upon her waters, and they shall be dried up; for it is the land of graven images, and they are mad upon
their idols.” God calls Abraham out of this idolatrous country, to a great distance from it. And when he came there, he gave
him no inheritance in it, no not so much as to
set his foot on; but he remained a stranger and a sojourner, that he and his family might be kept separate from all the world.

This was a new thing: God had never taken such a method before. His church had not in this manner been separated from the
rest of the world till now; but were wont to dwell with them, without any bar or fence to keep them separate; the mischievous
consequence of which had been found once and again. Before the flood, the effect of God’s people living intermingled with
the wicked world, without any remarkable wall of separation, was, that the sons of the church joined in
marriage with others, and thereby almost all soon became infected, and the church was almost brought to nothing. The method
that God then took to fence the church was, to drown the wicked world, and save the church in the ark. Before Abraham was
called, the world was become corrupt again. But now God took another method; he did not destroy the wicked world, and save
Abraham, and his wife, and Lot, but calls these persons to go and live separate from the rest of the world.

This was a new and great thing, that God did toward the work of redemption. It was about the middle of the space of time between
the fall of man and the coming of Christ; about two thousand years before the great Redeemer was to appear. But by this calling
of Abraham, the ancestor of Christ, a foundation was laid for upholding the church in the world, till Christ should come.
For the world having become idolatrous, there was a necessity in order to this, that the seed
of the woman should be thus separated from it.

And then it was needful that there should be a particular nation separated from the rest of the world, to receive the types
and prophecies that were to be given of Christ, to prepare the way for his coming; that to them might be committed the oracles
of God; that by them the history of God’s great works of creation and providence might be preserved; that Christ might be
born of this nation; and that from hence the light of the gospel might shine forth to the rest of
the world. These ends could not well be obtained, if God’s people, through all these two thousand years, had lived intermixed
with the heathen world. So that the calling of Abraham may be looked upon as a kind of new foundation laid for the visible
church of God, in a more distinct and regular state. Abraham, being the person in whom this foundation is laid, is represented
in Scripture as though he were the father of all the church, the father of all them that believe; a root whence the visible
church rose as a tree, distinct from all other plants. Of this tree Christ was the branch of righteousness; and from it, after
Christ came, the natural branches were broken off, and the Gentiles were grafted in. So that Abraham still remains the father,
the root of the church. It is the same tree which, from that small beginning in Abraham’s time, has in these days of the gospel
spread its branches over a great part of the earth, and will fill the whole in due time, and at the end of the world
shall be transplanted from an earthly soil into the paradise of God.

II. There accompanied this a more particular and full revelation and confirmation of the covenant of grace than ever before.
There had been before this two particular and solemn editions or confirmations of this covenant; one, to our first parents,
soon after the fall; the other, to Noah and his family, soon after the flood. And now there is a third, at and after the calling
of Abraham. It is now revealed to Abraham, not only that Christ should come; but that he should
be his seed; and promised, that all the families of the earth should be blessed in him. And God repeated the promises of this
to Abraham. The first promise was when he first called him, Gen. xii. 2. “And I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great; and thou shalt be a blessing.” The
same promise was renewed after he came into the land of Canaan, (Gen. xiii. 14-17.) Again after Abraham had returned from the
slaughter of the kings, (Gen. xv. 5, 6.) And a fourth time, after his offering up Isaac, (Gen. xxii. 16-18.)

In this renewal of the covenant of grace with Abraham, several particulars concerning it were revealed more fully than before;
not only that Christ was to be of Abraham’s seed, but also, the calling of the Gentiles, that all nations should be brought
into the church, all the families of the earth made blessed. And then the great condition of the covenant of grace, which
is faith, was now more fully made known. Gen. xv. 5, 6. “And he said unto him,
So shall thy seed be. And Abraham believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness.” Which is much noticed in the
New Testament, as that for which Abraham was called the father of believers.

And as there was now a further revelation of the covenant of grace, so there was a further confirmation of it by seals and
pledges; particularly, circumcision, which was a seal of the covenant of grace, as appears by the first institution of it,
Gen. xvii. It there appears to be a seal of that covenant by which God promised to make Abraham a father of many nations, (Gen. xvii. 5, 9, 10.) And we are expressly taught, that it was
a seal of righteousness of faith, Rom. iv. 11. Speaking of Abraham, the apostle says, he received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of faith.

Abraham’s family and posterity must be kept separate from the rest of the world, till Christ should come; and this sacrament
was the principal wall of separation. Besides, God gave Abraham a remarkable pledge of the fulfilment of the promise he had
made him, in his victory over Chedorlaomer and the kings that were with him. Chedorlaomer seems to have been a great emperor,
who reigned over a great part of the world at that day; and though he had his seat at Elam, which
was not much, if
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any thing, short of a thousand miles distant from the land of Canaan, yet he extended his empire so as to reign over many
parts of the land of Canaan, as appears by Gen. xiv. 4-7. It is supposed by learned men, that he was a king of the Assyrian empire at that day, which had been before begun by Nimrod
at Babel. And as it was the honour of kings in those days to build cities for the seat of their empire, (Gen. x. 10-12.) so
it is conjectured, that he had gone forth and built him a city in Elam, and made that his seat; and that those other kings
who came with him, were his deputies in the several cities and countries where they reigned. But yet as mighty an empire as
he had, and as great an army as he came with, Abraham, only with his trained servants, that were born in his house, conquered
and subdued this mighty emperor, the kings that came with him, and all their army. This he received of God as a pledge of
what
he had promised, viz. the victory that Christ his seed should obtain over the nations of the earth, whereby he should possess the gates of his enemies.
It is plainly spoken of as such in the 41st of Isaiah. In that chapter is foretold the future glorious victory the church shall obtain over the nations of the world, (Isa. xli. 1, 10, 15.) This victory of Abraham over such a great emperor and his mighty forces, is spoken of as
a pledge and earnest of victory to the church, Isa. xli. 2, 3. “Who raised up the righteous man from the east, called him to his foot, gave the nations before him, and made him rule over
kings? He gave them as the dust to his sword, and as driven stubble to his bow. He pursued them, and passed safely; even by
the way that he had not gone with his feet.”

Another remarkable confirmation Abraham received of the covenant of grace, was when he returned from the slaughter of the
kings; when Melchisedec the king of Salem, the priest of the most high God, that great type of Christ, met him, and blessed
him, and brought forth bread and wine. The bread and wine signified the same blessings of the covenant of grace, that the
bread and wine does in the sacrament of the Lord’s supper. As Abraham had a seal of the covenant in
circumcision that was equivalent to baptism, so now he had a seal of it equivalent to the Lord’s supper. And Melchisedec’s
coming to meet him with such a seal of the covenant of grace, on the occasion of this victory, evinces, that it was a pledge
of God’s fulfilment of the same covenant. (Gen. xiv. 19, 20.)

Another confirmation of the covenant of grace, was the vision he had, in the deep sleep that fell upon him, of the smoking
furnace, and burning lamp, that passed between the parts of the sacrifice, (Gen. xv.) The sacrifice signified that of Christ. The smoking furnace that passed through the midst of that sacrifice first, signified
the sufferings of Christ. But the burning lamp that followed, which shone with a clear bright light, signifies the
glory that followed Christ’s sufferings, and was procured by them.

Another remarkable pledge that God gave Abraham of the fulfilment of the covenant of grace, was his giving of that child of
whom Christ was to come, in his old age, (Heb. xi. 11, 12. and Rom. iv. 18-25.) and his delivering Isaac, after he was laid upon the wood of the sacrifice to be slain. This was a confirmation of Abraham’s
faith in the promise that God had made of Christ, that he should be of Isaac’s posterity; and was a
representation of the resurrection of Christ. (Heb. xi. 17-19.) And because this was given as a confirmation of the covenant of grace, therefore God renewed that covenant with Abraham
on this occasion, (Gen. xxii. 15-18.)

Thus you see how much more fully the covenant of grace was revealed and confirmed in Abraham’s time than ever it had been
before; by means of which Abraham seems to have had a clear view of Christ the great Redeemer, and the future things that
were to be accomplished by him. And therefore Christ informs us, that “Abraham rejoiced to see his day, and he saw it. and
was glad,” John viii. 56. So great an advance did it please God now to make in this
building, which he had been carrying on from the beginning of the world.

III. The next thing is God’s preserving the patriarchs for so long a time in the midst of the wicked inhabitants of Canaan,
and from all other enemies. The patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, were those of whom Christ was to proceed; and they
were now separated from the world, that in them his church might be upheld. Therefore, in preserving them, the great design
of redemption was carried on. He preserved them, and kept the inhabitants of the land where they
sojourned from destroying them; which was a remarkable dispensation of providence. For the inhabitants of the land were at
that day very wicked, though they grew more wicked afterwards. This appears by Gen. xv. 16. “In the fourth generation they shall come hither again; for the iniquity of the Canaanites is not yet full:” as much as to
say, though it be very great, yet it is not yet full. And their great wickedness also appears by Abraham and Isaac’s aversion
to
their children marrying any of the daughters of the land. Abraham, when he was old, could not be content till he had made
his servant swear that he would not take a wife for his son of the daughters of the land. And Isaac and Rebecca were content
to send away Jacob to so great a distance as Padan-Aram, to take him a wife thence. And when Esau married some of the daughters
of the land, we are told, that they were a grief of mind to Isaac and Rebecca.

Another argument of their great wickedness, was the instances we have in Sodom and Gomorrah, Admah and Zeboim, which were
some of the cities of Canaan, though they were probably most notoriously wicked; and likely to have the most bitter enmity
against these holy men; agreeable to what was declared at first, “I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between
thy seed and her seed.”
617617Gen. iii. 15.
Their holy lives were a continual condemnation of their wickedness. Besides, it could not be otherwise, but that they must
be much in reproving their wickedness, as we find Lot was in Sodom; who, we are told, vexed his righteous soul with their
unlawful deeds, and was to them a preacher of righteousness.

And they were the more exposed to them, being strangers and sojourners in the land, and having as yet no inheritance there.
Men are more apt to find fault with strangers, and to be irritated by any thing in them that offends, as they were with Lot
in Sodom. He very gently reproved their wickedness; and they say upon it, “This fellow came in to sojourn, and he will needs
be a ruler and a judge;” and threatened what they would do to him.

But God wonderfully preserved Abraham and Lot, Isaac and Jacob, and their families, amongst them, though they were few in
number, and they might quickly have destroyed them; which is taken notice of as a wonderful instance of God’s preserving mercy
towards his church, Psal. cv. 12-15. “When they were but a few men in number; yea, very few, and strangers in it. When they went from one nation to another, from
one kingdom to another people. He
suffered no man to do them wrong; yea, he reproved kings for their sakes, saying, Touch not mine anointed, and do my prophets
no harm.”

This preservation was, in some instances especially, very remarkable; when the people of the land were greatly irritated and
provoked; as they were by Simeon and Levi’s treatment of the Shechemites, in Gen. xxxiv. 30, 31. God then strangely preserved Jacob and his family, restraining the provoked people by an unusual terror on their minds. Gen. xxxv. 5. “And the terror of God was upon the cities that were round about them, and
they did not pursue after the sons of Jacob.”

And God preserved them, not only from the Canaanites, but from all others that intended mischief to them. He preserved Jacob
and his company, when pursued by Laban, full of rage, and a disposition to overtake, him as an enemy. God met him, rebuked
him, and said to him, “Take heed that thou speak not to Jacob either good or bad.” How wonderfully did he also preserve him
from Esau his brother, when he came forth with an army, with a full design to cut him off! How did
God, in answer to his prayer, when Jacob wrestled with Christ at Penuel, wonderfully turn Esau’s heart, and make him, instead
of meeting him as an enemy with slaughter and destruction, to meet him as a friend and brother, doing him no harm!

And thus was this handful, this little root that had the blessing of the Redeemer in it, preserved in the midst of enemies
and dangers: which was not unlike to preserving the ark in the midst of the tempestuous deluge.

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IV. The next thing I would mention is, the awful destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, and the neighbouring cities. This tended
to promote the great work designed two ways: First, as it tended powerfully to restrain the inhabitants of the land from injuring
those holy strangers that God had brought to sojourn amongst them. Lot was one of those strangers; he came into the land with
Abraham; and Sodom was destroyed for their abusive disregard of Lot, the
preacher of righteousness. And their destruction came upon their committing a most injurious and abominable insult on Lot,
and the strangers that were come into his house, even those angels, whom they probably took to be some of Lot’s former acquaintance
come to visit him. They in a most outrageous manner beset Lot’s house, intending a monstrous abuse and act of violence on
those strangers, and threatening to serve Lot worse than them.

But in the midst of this God smote them with blindness; and the next morning the city and the country about it was overthrown
in a most terrible storm of fire and brimstone; which dreadful destruction, as it was in the sight of the rest of the inhabitants
of the land, and therefore greatly tended to restrain them from hurting those holy strangers any more; it doubtless struck
a dread and terror on their minds, and made them afraid to hurt them, and probably was one
principal means to restrain them, and preserve the patriarchs. And when that reason is given, why the inhabitants of the land
did not pursue after Jacob, when they were so provoked by the destruction of the Shechemites, viz. that the terror of the Lord was upon them; it is very probable, that this was the terror which was set home upon them. They remembered the amazing destruction of Sodom,
and the cities of the plain, that came upon them for their abusive treatment of Lot, and so
durst not hurt Jacob and his family, though they were so much provoked to it.

Another way that this awful destruction tended to promote this great affair of redemption, was, that hereby God remarkably
exhibited the terrors of his law, to make men sensible of their need of redeeming mercy. The work of redemption never was
carried on without this. The law, from the beginning, is made use of as a schoolmaster to bring men to Christ.

But under the Old Testament there was much more need of some extraordinary, visible, and sensible manifestation of God’s wrath
against sin, than in the days of the gospel; since a future state, and the eternal misery of hell, is more clearly revealed,
and since the awful justice of God against the sins of men has been so wonderfully displayed in the sufferings of Christ.
And therefore the revelation that God gave of himself in those days, used to be accompanied with
much more terror than it is in these days of the gospel. So when God appeared at mount Sinai to give the law, it was with
thunders and lightnings, and a thick cloud, and the voice of the trumpet exceeding loud. Some external, awful manifestations
of God’s wrath against sin were on some accounts especially necessary before the giving of the law: and therefore, before
the flood, the terrors of the law handed down by tradition from Adam served for that purpose. Adam lived nine hundred and
thirty
years himself, to proclaim God’s awful threatenings denounced in the covenant made with him, and how dreadful the consequences
of the fall were; and others, that conversed with Adam, lived till the flood. And the destruction of the world by the flood
served to exhibit the terrors of the law, and manifested the wrath of God against sin; in order to make men sensible of the
absolute necessity of redeeming mercy. And some that saw the flood were alive in Abraham’s time.

But this was now in a great measure forgotten; therefore God was pleased again, in a most amazing manner, to show his wrath
against sin, in the destruction of these cities; which was the liveliest image of hell of any thing that ever had been; and
therefore the apostle Jude says, “They suffer the vengeance of eternal fire,” Jude 7. God rained storms of fire and brimstone upon them; probably by thick flashes of lightning. The streams of brimstone
burnt up all these cities; so that they perished in the flames of divine wrath. By this might be seen the dreadful wrath of
God against the ungodliness and unrighteousness of men; which tended to show the necessity of redemption, and so to promote
that great work.

V. God again renewed and confirmed the covenant of grace to Isaac and Jacob. To Isaac in these words; Gen. xxvi. 3, 4. “And I will perform the oath which I sware unto Abraham thy father; and I will make thy seed to multiply as the stars of
heaven, and will give unto thy seed all these countries; and in thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed.” And
afterwards to Jacob; first, in Isaac blessing him and his seed, wherein he acted and
spoke by extraordinary divine direction, Gen. xxvii. 29. “Let people serve thee, and nations bow down to thee; be lord over thy brethren, and let thy mother’s sons bow down to thee:
Cursed be every one that curseth thee, and blessed be he that blesseth thee.” And therefore Esau, not included in this blessing,
missed of being blessed as an heir of the benefits of the covenant of grace.

This covenant was again renewed and confirmed to Jacob at Bethel, in his vision of the ladder that reached to heaven; which
was a symbol of the way of salvation by Christ. The stone that Jacob rested on was a type of Christ, the stone of Israel,
which the spiritual Israel rests upon; as is evident, because it was anointed, and made use of as an altar. But we know that
Christ is the anointed of God, and is the only true altar. While Jacob was resting on this stone, and
saw this ladder, God appears to him as his covenant God, and renews the covenant of grace with him; as in Gen. xxviii. 14. “And thy seed shall be as the dust of the earth; and thou shalt spread abroad to the west, and to the east, and to the north,
and to the south; and in thee and in thy seed shall all the families of the earth be blessed.”

Jacob had another remarkable confirmation of this covenant at Penuel, where he wrestled with God, and prevailed; where Christ
appeared to him in the form of that nature which he was afterwards to receive in a personal union with his divine nature.—And
God renewed his covenant with him again, after he left Padan-Aram, and was come up to Bethel, and where he had the vision
of the ladder; as you may see in Gen. xxxv. 10-15.

Thus the covenant of grace was now renewed much oftener than it had been before. The light of the gospel now began to shine
much brighter, as the time of Christ’s appearing drew nearer.

VI. The next thing I would observe, is God’s remarkably preserving the family of which Christ was to proceed from perishing
by famine, by the instrumentality of Joseph. When there was a seven-years famine approaching, God was pleased, by a wonderful
providence, to send Joseph into Egypt, there to provide for Jacob and his family, and to keep the holy seed alive, which otherwise
would have perished. Joseph was sent into Egypt for that end, as he observes, Gen.
l. 20. “But as for you, ye thought evil against me; but God meant it unto good, to save much people alive.” How often had this holy
root, that had in it the future branch of righteousness, the glorious Redeemer, been in danger of being destroyed! But God
wonderfully preserved it.

This salvation of the house of Israel, by the hand of Joseph, was upon some accounts very much a resemblance of the salvation
of Christ. The children of Israel were saved by Joseph their kinsman and brother, from perishing by famine; as he that saves
the souls of the spiritual Israel from spiritual famine is their near kinsman, and one that is not ashamed to call them brethren.
Joseph was a brother they had hated, sold, and as it were killed; for they had designed to
kill him. So Christ is one that we naturally hate, and by our wicked lives, have sold for the vain things of the world, and
by our sins have slain. Joseph was first in a state of humiliation; he was a servant, as Christ appeared in the form of a
servant; and then was cast into a dungeon, as Christ descended into the grave. When he rose out of the dungeon, he was in
a state of great exaltation, at the king’s right hand as his deputy, to reign over all his kingdom, to provide food, to preserve
life; and being in this state of exaltation, he dispenses food to his brethren, and so gives them life. So Christ was exalted
at God’s right hand to be a Prince and Saviour to his brethren, received gifts for men, even for the rebellious, them that
had hated and sold him.

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VII. After this there was a prophecy of Christ, on some accounts more particular than any before, in Jacob’s blessing his
son Judah. This was more particular as it showed of whose posterity he was to be. When God called Abraham, it was revealed
that he was to be of Abraham’s posterity. Before, we have no account of any revelation concerning Christ’s pedigree confined
to narrower limits than the posterity of Noah: after this it was confined to still
narrower limits; for though Abraham had many sons, yet it was revealed, that Christ was to be of Isaac’s posterity. And then
it was limited still more; for when Isaac had two sons, it was revealed that Christ was to be of Israel’s posterity. And now,
though Israel had twelve sons, yet it is revealed that Christ should be of Judah’s posterity. Christ is the lion of the tribe
of Judah. Respect is chiefly had to his great acts, when it is said here. Gen. xlix. 8. “Judah, thou
art he whom thy brethren shall praise; thy hand shall be in the neck of thine enemies; thy father’s children shall bow down
before thee. Judah is a lion’s whelp; from the prey, my son, thou art gone up: he stooped down, he couched as a lion, and
as an old lion; who shall rouse him up?” And then this prediction is more particular concerning the time of Christ’s coming,
as in Gen. xlix. 10. “The sceptre shall not depart from Judah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet, until
Shiloh come; and unto him shall the gathering of the people be.” The prophecy here, of the calling of the Gentiles consequent
on Christ’s coming, seems to be more plain than any had been before, in the expression, “to him shall the gathering of the
people be.”
618618 Genesis 49:10
Thus you see how that gospel-light which dawned immediately after the fall of man, gradually increases.

VIII. The work of redemption was carried on in this period, in God’s wonderfully preserving the children of Israel in Egypt,
when the power of Egypt was engaged utterly to destroy them. They seemed to be wholly in the hands of the Egyptians; they
were their servants, and were subject to the power of Pharaoh: and Pharaoh set himself to weaken them with hard bondage. And
when he saw that did not do, he set himself to extirpate their race, by commanding that every male
child should be drowned. But after all that Pharaoh could do, God wonderfully preserved them; and not only so, but increased
them exceedingly; so that, instead of being extirpated, they greatly multiplied.

IX. Here is to be observed, not only the preservation of the nation, but God’s wonderfully preserving and upholding his invisible
church in that nation, when in danger of being overwhelmed in the idolatry of Egypt. The children of Israel being long among
the Egyptians, and servants under them, and so not having advantages to keep God’s ordinances among themselves, and maintain
any public worship or instruction, whereby the true religion might be upheld, and there being
now no written word, they by degrees, in a great measure, lost the true religion, and borrowed the idolatry of Egypt; and
the greater part of the people fell away to the worship of their gods. This we learn by Ezek. xx. 6, 7, 8; xxiii. 8.

This now was the third time that God’s church was almost swallowed up and carried away with the wickedness of the world; once
before the flood; the other time, before the calling of Abraham; and now, the third time, in Egypt. But yet God did not suffer
his church to be quite overwhelmed: he still saved it, like the ark in the flood, and as he saved Moses in the midst of the
waters, in an ark of bulrushes, where he was in the utmost danger of being swallowed up. The
true religion was still kept up with some; and God had still a people among them, even in this miserable, corrupt, and dark
time. The parents of Moses were true servants of God, as we may team by Heb. xi. 23. “By faith Moses, when he was born, was hid three months of his parents, because they saw that he was a proper child; and
they were not afraid of the king’s commandment.”

I have now shown how the work of redemption was carried on from the calling of Abraham to Moses; in which we have seen many
great things done towards this work, and a great advancement of this building, beyond what had preceded.